Experiencing Reiss Personal Tailoring


Can you remember your first real suit? I can. I arrived in the city, shaggy haired, unskilled, full of hope but in full realisation that the task of finding employment was essential to survival. Up until then I had owned one Topman suit which had been worn to a variety of dull family extravaganza and the odd formal social function. Now, if this suit had a prime, it had certainly passed long ago. What kind of employer would trust a young man in such sartorial disarray? I needed to take well polished brogue step up on the tailoring food chain. My first executive decision to join the rat race involved a jaunt to Reiss to update my largely high street wardrobe with a premium high street suit. I opted for a simple two button black suit. I can distinctly remember feeling very special indeed when my purchase was whisked away from my uneasy grasp so that alterations could be made. The very idea of alterations was alien to me. Oh how naive I was back then. Fast forward a few years and despite a reduced need for a formal uniform I have found myself back at Reiss. Invited to take another step up on the sartorial ladder to sample their recently launched Personal Tailoring service.

The Reiss Personal Tailoring area within the flagship store.

Long time readers will know how often I have dreamed of entering the world of bespoke and made to measure suiting. The thought of having a suit made to my own personal specification and desire has appealed to me for many years. Thanks to a break to Hong Kong I entered in to this fabulously well fitted world last November. Having been warned that the experience would lead to an addiction I managed to avoid the lure, mainly through the fear of bankruptcy. Almost twelves months on and Reiss gave me the opportunity to step back in to this world to road test their latest offering.

The seventeen process beautifully presented in store.

The Reiss Personal Tailoring experience brings a much needed luxurious approach to formal menswear and has the potential to change the concept of tailoring on the high street. The comprehensive, seventeen stage made to measure service outfits the discerning, modern gentleman. Costing from £550, only £100 more than its most expensive off-the-peg suit this would be a sound investment and takes between four to six weeks from the first consultation to finished suit.

The tailor's essentials

Unless you are Antonio Bracciani (refer to issue No. 9 of Fantastic Man) an off the peg suit will rarely fit. In all likelihood, it will not fit specifically because the brand is designing for a type of man that is different from you. I frequently have issues with sleeve length and pitch while trousers are an ever present thorn in my suiting paw. The thing is most of us don't have ready to wear bodies. As you should all know, a made-to-measure is cut from an existing 'block' which is adjusted to a client's unique specification. Although Reiss are not naming names, the block has apparently been created specifically for them by a prominent Savile Row pattern cutter.

A glimpse at Reiss' block pattern.

Each of the seven stores in Britain that offer the service have personal tailoring specialists to guide you through the process. To ease matters further, my sartorial guide was Ben Leaver, Head of Personal Shopping. Before joining Reiss just over twelve months ago, Leaver worked at Kilgour. He certainly knows a thing or two about suits and was the perfect companion to walk me through the process. The real beauty of a well measured, well made suit is that it will hide any flaws and accentuate the positives. Not only will you look slimmer, taller and more pulled together, but you will move much more freely and feel totally at ease. You should feel as relaxed in it as you would in your favourite pair of jeans. To reach this level of ease, the first stage requires the tape measure. Eighteen measurements are taken with a display of consumate ease. After the measurements were recorded the real fun began as Leaver began to sketch out our shared vision of what the suit could and ultimately would be. The level of choice and degree of customisation is almost overwhelming but Leaver talked me through everything.

A selection of fabric options

To begin with there are more than forty fabric options in combinations of wool and mohair and a variety of patterns. I opted for a mohair blend in a stunning midnight navy hue. Following this decision I had the choice of three jacket styles; one button, two button and tuxedo. Then decisions had to be made on the lapel, pockets, cuff buttons, vents, trouser style, waist details, trousers bottoms, lining, undercollar melton, button holes. After succinctly describing how I wanted the suit to be and how I would wear it, Leaver was soon in perfect pitch with my way aesthetic. I left the first consultation hugely excited and in full confidence that the suit would match my high expectations.

Thread choices...

Four weeks later and I was invited back for my first fitting. After reading Simon Crompton's bespoke suit fitting experiences I recalled that one of the most important things to discern in the sleeve at this stage is its correct pitch. By this I mean how it hangs in relation to the body. If there is more material in the back of the sleeve, it hangs forward, more in the front and it will hang further back. Unlike Crompton it seems that my arm hangs a little forward. Leaver soon made the required adjustments by inserting a few pins where necessary. The odd little tweak on the length and fit were the only required amends for the jacket and the trousers only needed the smallest of adjustments. A week later and the finished suit was ready and this weekend saw me wear the suit for the very first time. Below are a few snapshots of my made to measure suit worn on a seemingly made to measure Sunday afternoon in Autumn... 

In spite of my terrible posture, the suit manages to accentuate my good points and hide the bad. Worn here with shirt by Omar Kashoura, handkerchief by Drakes, and Pukk shot brogues by Joe Casely-Hayford for John Lewis.

I am particularly pleased with the sleeve length. I might be showing off more cuff than most but after suffering from years of oversized sleeve lengths I positively thrive on revealing that little extra.

A closer look...Worn here with shirt by Omar Kashoura and handkerchief by Drakes.

My new favourite trousers. Finally a pair that fit! As I wanted this suit to be my ideal Sunday Best I opted to go a little higher in the leg and reveal a little more sock and shoe than I normally would. After investing so heavily in my shoe options in recent months it is only right that I wear trousers which show them off.

I take great pleasure in declaring that the finished suit is as close to perfection as I can comprehend. Whilst there is nothing that I would change, there is plenty for me to wax lyrical over. I was hugely impressed by the entire experience. A world away from my previous experiences of tailoring on the high street. As David Nicholls wrote in his piece over on the Telegraph, 'The personal tailoring range is Reiss's stab at 'affordable luxury', with the aim of enticing the more aspirant of its existing clientele as well as the recession-hit banker looking for an alternative to Savile Row.' I am quite certain that the uncompromising level of quality and service that Reiss are offering will help transform how most men buy their suits on the high street.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

  • Street Walking... Some words about styles: Don't you just love to walk around your city or town and look at the Christmas windows?My friend Gail Watson in New York sent me these photos of Bergdorf's windows,...
  • Season's greetings... Some words about styles: To my dear readers. It is the time of year when I reflect on all the things I am grateful for, and your support is absolutely precious. I wish you a wonderful festive...
  • The evolving passion for shoes... The tools of a craftsman...photography by Euan DenholmNow that the Christmas shopping has been completed, my thoughts have begun to wander away from my the present and...
  • In Lieu Of A Proper Thank You Note... Some words about styles: I want to send each and every one of you a personal handwritten thank you note.When that seemed impossible, I wanted to make a list of every name of every person who...
  • Night Before Christmas Don't Ra... My first experience with interior design in cyberspace was the HGTV site Rate My Space. During that time I learned alot. And I made a few pen pals and friends. For many...
  • Advent - Twenty Four... Some words about styles: Whilst nurturing some of the best menswear design talent in the capital and beyond, b store have been merging art, fashion and design seamlessly for a number of years...
  • Merry Christmas... Merry Christmas to you all! We hope the fat men in red brings you everything on your list and more whilst you enjoy some quality time with all of your family! Here's to...
  • Merry Majolica Christmas And How To... Some words about styles: This is a reprint from last year for my friends at Between Naps On The Porch for Tablescape Thursday. Hope you enjoy it the second time around.From Visual Vamp December...
  • Merry Christmas to...me... Merry Christmas to me. My gift to myself, a pair of Harris Tweed Clarks Desert Boots sitting pretty under the tree.Over the last week or two I have been running around...
  • How Much Furniture Can You Get In H... Some words about styles: Bedrooms small or large are bursting. We love to make them multi task and multi function.Once upon a time a double bed, or s set of twin beds and a night table or two,...
  • Advent - Day Twenty Three... 3939 launched as a lifestyle and retail concept located in the basement of a well loved Japanese restaurant, Life just last month. Set up by three creative friends in...
  • 413 Votes For My Favorite and My Be... Some words about styles: I am so pleased to have 413 followers. I cherish every one of you.Will you please do me a favor?If each one of you casts a vote for Jenny from My Favorite and My Best, I...
  • Who's Dog Is This?... Some words about styles: Who's dog is this?It's Martha's doggie Sharkey!Her house looks amazing for Christmas, and she shares "a peek" with 25 photos of it on The Martha Blog.The photos are of...
Save Experiencing Reiss Personal Tailoring on social network:
  • Travel Organised... Some words about styles: Smythson of Bond Street is one of the UK's most revered luxury leather goods labels. Established in 1887 by Frank Smythson, an entrepreneur and inventor of the brand's...
  • Clipping File Roundup... I'm sure you have a pile of images you collect over time. You like them, or you make a mental note to use them in a future post you have in mind. Or sometimes the image...
  • Does Your Furniture Talk?... Some words about styles: How many times have you rearranged the furniture in a room? What makes you jump up from the couch and start to push it around? Does it whisper in your ear and say "move...
  • Hammer time... What a perfect Christmas - I've spent the last few days over indulging in the company of family and friends, which has been fabulous. Even though it is quite hot here in...
  • Una Noche de Garufa!... Some words about styles: Tonight's the Night!Una Noche de GarufaThis is the time we all come togetherto break bread, and raise a glassto the passing year, and the year ahead,to each other for...
  • What Do You The Day After Christmas... Some words about styles: It's the day after. Are you pooped? Happy? Out shopping? Relaxing?I'm at work, and I am pooped.We had a great time yesterday. We went to friends for Christmas dinner, a...
  • Tokyo... Absolutely head over heels for Tokyo!I've spent the better part of this week exploring the incredible sights, sounds and fashion this amazing city has on offer.It's all...
  • Farewell Eartha Kitt... Some words about styles: A sultry singer, dancer and actress who rose from South Carolina cotton fields to become an international symbol of elegance and sensuality, has died.Her career spanned...
  • Let's Get Stoned... Some words about styles: Need a little break?Snow covers the ground in many places.Housebound gardeners look through seed catalogs and at garden books and journals.I say let's get stoned! This...
  • My Christmas Card To You... Another Christmas! And another Christmas as a blogger sharing it with you!Do you remember your best Christmas? Or your worst?What age were you when you recognized what...